2. Site of Weiyang Palace
Weiyang Palace was a palace complex built in 200 BC and served as the administrative center and imperial residence of the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 24), as well as the Western Jin dynasty (265-316) and several other regimes during the Northern and Southern dynasties.
When viewed from above, the palace was roughly square with a gross area of 4.8 square kilometers. Nowadays, only an archaeological site can be found in the Weiyang Palace site, no palace.
It was one of the largest, longest-lasting and most far-reaching ancient palaces in the history of China, the political, economic, military and cultural center of the Western Han Dynasty, the decision-making place and the beginning of the ancient Silk Road.
Cultural Exchange
Shanghai tea salon in London brews cultural ties
Intangible Cultural Heritage
Chinese people at home and abroad bond together in ritual ceremony